Q. Did you see a reduced fruit set in plums, pluots, and pluerries this year or if it was just mine? I have 3- to 5-year-old trees and this year I just did not see many flowers at all. Not so much lack of pollination, but a lack of flowers. I fertilize with compost and try to keep an eye on how much growth I get each year. I want “fruit production”, not “wood production”.
A. I look at fruit production from now forward to judge
how much thinning (or none) should be started in about one or two weeks. Fruit
removed should be about the size of your thumbnail. Sometimes late freezing
weather removes fruit for me. Right now, early flowering peaches have fruit
about the size of a large pea. A reduced number of flowers, however, usually
means poor pruning practices. It’s best to be observant!
Youtube if fruit was killed by a late spring freeze.
Fruit
production varies where you live in the valley and in different microclimates.
Some places in the valley (and landscapes) are warmer than other places. At The
Orchard at Ahern, we have about 70 varieties of fruit trees producing fruit
from late May through December. Our 25 – 30 varieties of peaches finish
producing fruit toward the end of July and into the early parts of August.
There are varieties that produce peaches in September or October but for me
it’s no longer “peach season”. September through December is “apple or pear
season”.
The same
holds true for apricots, apples, pears, plums but not citrus. Generally, early
flowering fruit trees produce the earliest crops of fruit. These early
flowering varieties are also the varieties most likely not to produce fruit
because of late spring freezes. If you want to be sure to get early production
of fruit, live where it’s less likely to freeze!
About
mid-March I observe the fruit remaining on earliest flowering varieties of
peach, plum/pluot, and apricot as indicators for this year’s harvest. Right now,
the earliest flowering peaches have fruit that are the size of a large pea.
They also have dried up flowers and fruit dropping from the tree because of
late spring freezing weather causing them to die.
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